3 a. m.
Panama has shown its first case of new coronavirus.
The patient is a Panamanian woman who returned from Madrid on Sunday. While a few dozen cases have been shown in Latin America, the epidemic is looming in Europe, one of four European countries with more than 1,000 cases each.
Panama’s Minister of Health Rosario Turner said Monday that the positive of the 40-year-old woman had been shown at the Gorgas Memorial Institute.
The woman is remote at home and will receive visits from fitness workers.
The virus that causes COVID-19 disease has manifested itself in the Caribbean, Brazil, Mexico, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, Guadalupe, Martinique, Argentina, Peru, Costa Rica, Chile and Argentina, where a death has occurred.
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2 a. M.
China recorded a new low in its coronavirus outbreak on Tuesday.
Only 19 new cases of the new virus were recorded in the last 24 hours, the lowest update since China began publishing national figures on January 20, but two cases were reported at the Wuhan epicenter, where the outbreak began in December. The city is also guilty of 16 of the additional 17 deaths, bringing China’s national total to 3,136.
China recorded a total of 80,754 cases, of which nearly 60,000 have been discharged from the hospital and 17,721 are still being treated.
It is revealing that 36 new suspicious instances have been reported, indicating an additional decrease in new long-term instances.
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1:40 a. m.
A spokesman for the retirement home in the Seattle area, which is the worst COVID-19 outbreak in the United States, said Monday that 31 citizens still at the facility had tested positive for the virus.
Authorities said 19 coronavirus deaths were connected to the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington, 3 were made public the previous Monday.
Life Care Center spokesman Tim Killian said tests had been conducted on the remaining citizens. In addition to the 31 positives, Killian said three tests were inconclusive and one negative. The results are still pending in 20 other tests. Killian said that citizens who tested positive will be treated at the Life Care Center and those with negative evidence will be transferred to some other domain of the facility.
Before the outbreak, there were citizens in Life Care, now there are fewer than 60.
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10:25 p. m.
The harsh Greek Orthodox Church has rejected calls to end communion known as a threat of coronavirus spread.
The board of administrators of the Church of Greece said on Monday that the spoonful of wine that is inserted into the mouths of the believers of communion “clearly cannot cause the spread of the disease”.
This so-called communion is an “act of love” that expires in a declaration.
He said the Church of Greece would print and distribute leaflets to its followers with precautions against the spread of the virus, and suggested that priests pray during Sunday’s premises to stop the spread of the disease.
He added that the Church of Greece will continue to celebrate communion, “with the certainty that we are in communion (so) with life and immortality. “
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10:10 p. m.
Authorities say the U. S. army commander in Europe and several members may have been exposed to the new coronavirus.
The army said Monday in a statement that Lieutenant General Christopher G. Cavoli and the others controlled their own fitness and worked remotely.
Also on Monday, French officials said Culture Minister Franck Riester had conducted tests to detect the virus.
French Health Minister Olivier Veran Riester has shown “few symptoms” and is quarantined at home.
Veran said Riester had spent time in the small space of the country’s National Assembly parliament, where several lawmakers tested positive.
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10 p. m.
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said it was being restricted across the country to verify and prevent the spread of the new coronavirus.
Monday’s decree came on the same day that he announced that the first COVID-19 patient in the northern Italian group is breathing only for the first time since his positive test.
Mattia, 38, was transferred from intensive care on Monday, tested positive on 21 February and opened the physical care crisis in Italy.
Italy has 9,172 instances of the new virus. With the most recent figures, Italy has surpassed South Korea again as a country with the maximum number of instances outside China: more than 460 carriers of the virus have died in Italy.
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8:50 p. m.
U. S. officials report four more deaths of others inflamed with the new coronavirus, bringing the total in the country to 26, the maximum of them in Washington state.
Health officials in Washington reported on Monday 3 more coronavirus deaths, all citizens of a retirement home in the Seattle area that was torn apart by COVID-19.
Washington state now has at least 22 coronavirus-related deaths and authorities say 19 of them are at the Life Care Center in Kirkland.
In California, officials reported the time of COVID-19’s death in the state after the death of a Santa Clara County at age 60.
The two deaths similar to the American virus occurred in Florida.
The virus has inflamed at least six hundred other people in the United States.
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8:30 p. m.
A cruise ship sent with one of the coronavirus instances arrived at a San Francisco Bay harbor after being forced to remain dormant off the coast of California for days.
The Grand Princess stopped Monday at Oakland Harbor with more than 3,500 people on board, adding 21 inflamed with the new virus. It is not known how many passengers would disembark from the shipment on Monday.
Shipping takes others from 54 countries. Americans will be transported to military bases in California, Texas, and Georgia for COVID-19 virus screening and quarantined. The State Department will work with the countries of origin of the other passengers to establish their repatriation.
The governor of California said that about 1,100 team members, 19 of whom were tested for COVID-19, will be quarantined and treated aboard the ship, which will dock elsewhere.
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7:50 p. m.
Canadian fitness says a man died of the new virus in a North Vancouver nursing home in what is believed to be the first COVID-19 death in the country.
BEFORE CHRIST. Dr. Bonnie Henry, Provincial Health Officer, and Health Minister Adrian Dix announced over the weekend that two elders of the Lynn Valley Care Center had been with the virus.
Henry says the diagnoses followed an earlier diagnosis of a care home worker, so scary cases are examples of network transmission.
Health officials described the gym as an “epidemic. “
There are now 32 of the new coronavirus in British Columbia and more than 70 in Canada.
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7:45 p. m.
Slovakia, the Catholic stronghold in Central Europe, is banning Mass and all other occasions for the next two weeks in an effort to involve the novel coronavirus outbreak.
Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini said that since Tuesday all cultural, sporting and social events have been banned for at least two weeks. This includes the final of cinemas and the postponement of matches in the Slovak football and hockey leagues.
In addition, Slovak citizens returning home from Italy, China, South Korea and Iran will have to be quarantined for two weeks at home.
The government will also extend the preventive controls already carried out on the Austrian border to all neighbouring countries.
Slovakia has seven demonstrations of COVID-19.
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6:45 p. m.
World Health Organization officials said Monday that of around 80,000 people with health problems with COVID-19 in China, more than 70% have recovered and left hospitals.
Patients are regularly released when they test negative twice for the virus within 24 hours, meaning they no longer use the virus, some countries would possibly use a slightly different definition, possibly coming when other people no longer have respiratory symptoms. or CT scan.
The World Health Organization said other people’s “recovery” can take much longer, depending on the severity of the disease.
Dr Mike Ryan, Head of Emergency Services at the World Health Organization, said it takes up to six weeks for others to fully recover from COVID-19 infections, which can come with pneumonia and other respiratory disorders in severe cases. the number of reported patients had not been routinely provided to the World Health Organization, although the UN fitness company requested more information from all countries with instances.
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6:40 p. m.
Ireland canceled all St. Patrick’s Day parades across the country to stop the spread of the new coronavirus.
Prime Minister Leo Varadkar announced the cancellation and said that “in the coming days there will be more recommendations on massive public meetings. “
The annual March 17 parade in Dublin is one of Ireland’s biggest tourist occasions, drawing over a million people to the streets of the city. Tens of thousands more flock to parades in Ireland’s largest city at the moment, Cork, and in small communities.
There are 21 reported cases of COVID-19, the disease through the virus, in Ireland.
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6:20 p. m.
A key United Nations industrial organization warns of the impending global economic recession as countries respond to the new coronavirus outbreak.
Richard Kozul-Wright of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development predicts a global “coup” for the world economy between $1 trillion and $2 trillion this year, and warns it could be worse.
Even before oil markets fall on Monday, Kozul-Wright said countries whose economies rely heavily on commodity production will suffer tensions as an economic slowdown reduces demand for their products.
Kozul-Wright said the European Union, which faced a poor economic landscape in late 2019, “is almost certain” to fall into recession this year, specifically targeting tensions in Germany and Italy.
He was speaking in the publication of a new UNCTAD report that examines the imaginable effect of the COVID-19 epidemic and predicts that annual global expansion will increase below 2. 5% this year.
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6:15 p. m.
The executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the firm that manages airports in the metropolitan area, has tested and is remote at home, according to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
Cuomo noted that director Rick Cotton visited the facility on his way back from hotspots.
Meanwhile, the manager who runs Paris’ Orly and Charles de Gaulle airports was positive.
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6:05 p. m.
European money markets fell into a market, ending the day with their biggest losses since the darkest days of the 2008 global currency crisis.
The index in Italy, where the government stopped to and from the country’s monetary and commercial heart, fell by 11. 2%.
The FTSE 100 in Britain lost 7. 3%, Germany’s DAX 7. 9% and France’s CAC 40 fell by 8. 4%.
The Stoxx 600 regional index fell by 7. 4%, more than 20% less than its recent peak peak and placed it in a bear market.
The fall occurs amid widespread considerations of emerging economic prices of controlling the new coronavirus. A dramatic drop in the value of oil, which lost 20% overnight, rocked investors again.
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4:45 p. m.
Germany reported the first two deaths in the country of other people inflamed with the new coronavirus.
Heinsberg County, western Germany, reported the first death on Monday, while the city of Essen reported the death of an 89-year-old woman as the second.
The Heinsberg region has so far had the concentration of infections in Germany.
The German state of Heinsberg and Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, accounted for 484 of the 1,112 infections shown in Germany on Monday morning.
Earlier in the day, experts attributed the spread of the outbreak to immediate testing due to the lack of virus-related deaths in Germany. They said Germany had detected many cases early, adding more young patients who were less likely to expand serious complications. .
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